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41 Sentences With "news flashes"

How to use news flashes in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "news flashes" and check conjugation/comparative form for "news flashes". Mastering all the usages of "news flashes" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The news flashes about Manafort and the headlines about Trump's "regrets" are doing it for him.
"Finally the wind drove the fire to the ocean, where salt water made survivors faint" is among the less disturbing news flashes that Mrs.
Apocalyptic news flashes add background static as the family huddles around home movies and listens to squads of gas-masked soldiers tramping the leafy streets.
The term came from telegraphy, and before that from sending messages with literal flashes of light with mirrors or fires; "news flashes" come from the same origin.
Fujiwara's "Last Orgy" bulletins brought readers monthly news flashes about the hottest rappers, the latest 12-inch vinyl, photographers, D.J.s, skateboarders, sneakers, break dancers and American heritage brands.
This is because chatty Mercury will square off with the planet of abundance, Jupiter—and this won't be the last time you'll hear these news flashes or have these discussions.
Although Serial has offered occasional updates on the first and second seasons, these brief news flashes pale in comparison to the work that was put into the show's original string of episodes.
Mallouk says it's easy to look at news flashes about US stock records and assume that the best market strategy involves owning nothing but large US stocks or Dow Jones Industrial Average components.
When the Amazon Echo debuted, it could only play music, tell you the weather, set alarms and timers, read news flashes, tell corny jokes, add things to your Amazon shopping list, tell you the weather and recite basic trivia.
I think of these as potent news flashes revealing old and new cracks in the grand democratic experiment that we seem to be failing at—technology seems to offer an initial democratizing possibility for expression and exchange before surveillance states and corporatization take over.
In a series of news flashes, Al Jazeera TV quoted Hossein Dehghan, a commander of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards, as also telling the channel that Tehran would not negotiate with the U.S. administration under any circumstances and that if Washington decided to go to war then all American bases in the region would be targeted.
Eighteen months later, in October 1927, the Press arranged for a second Carrell station, WHBM, to broadcast from the Eagles auditorium beginning on October 24, as part of the newspaper's "Radio Show and Home Exposition"."News Flashes and Other Features Are Broadcast Over WHBM This Week", The Sheboygan Press, October 19, 1927, page 8.
Mambo included features such as page caching to improve performance on busy sites, advanced templating techniques, and a fairly robust API. It could provide RSS feeds and automate many tasks, including web indexing of static pages. Interface features included printable versions of pages, news flashes, blogs, forums, polls, calendars, website searching, language internationalization, and others.
The main dailies employed their own journalists who competed for news flashes. All newspapers relied upon the Agence Havas (now Agence France-Presse), a telegraphic news service with a network of reporters and contracts with Reuters to provide world service. The staid old papers retained their loyal clientele because of their concentration on serious political issues.
Also included in the building were studios and offices of WNAC and WAAB, the network's Boston stations. One area where the expansion was noticeable was in the news department, which was praised by national magazines like Variety for its coverage of state legislatures, as well as coverage of news-makers throughout New England."Yankee Network News Flashes." Variety, March 27, 1934, p. 38.
John Berger said of this work: > In these memorable images, in these images that refuse to be forgotten, go > very close to the griefs being inflicted – they are still-lifes of grief, > and, at the same time includes the time-scale of the mountain. They are the > opposite of news flashes. They are full of history's irony, fury and anger > at the mistakes made in its name.
They were aided by senior church laymen, who kept Bishop Gorazd informed. However, their presence was discovered by the Nazis, and on June 18 the Nazis attacked their hiding place in the cathedral, forcing them to commit suicide. The Orthodox priests, laymen, and Bishop Gorazd were arrested and killed by firing squads on September 4, 1942.News Flashes from Czechoslovakia Under Nazi Domination (1942), p.
Newsletters, sent two times a year, and bi- weekly electronic news flashes keep citizens in the loop on water issues and events. Education and training includes teaching children, citizens, business people, and policy-makers how to protect the Chattahoochee. CRK educates thousands of children each year onboard floating classrooms on Lake Lanier and West Point Lake to learn about water quality and river stewardship.
The Jakarta Post features an online edition, which includes both print and internet exclusive stories that are free to access. There are also news flashes that are developed as they happen. The paper hopes to digitise the entirety of its printed stories, with at least 50,000 articles dating to June 1994 already digitised. In 2017, The Jakarta Post began charging subscriptions in order to access "premium" online content.
Mikko Hannula works both as a real-time play-by-play commentator and makes news flashes for radio (Urheiluradio) and television (Urheiluruutu). Hannula usually he commentates alpine skiing, track and field, sport wrestling and volleyball. In 2004 Hannula was awarded the Sports Journalist of Year in Finland. Hannula has said that he likes to use the assistance of color commentators because four eyes can see more than two.
Connected Life is a technology and lifestyle web-show that airs weekly on Sympatico/MSN Canada since July 1, 2007. Each episode is approximately 6 minutes long. Through the use of interviews, product reviews, news flashes and comments from the public, the show examines how technology intersects with people's day-to-day lives. Connected Life is hosted by renowned technology thought-leader Bradley Shende on new media and consumer technology.
Nonofficial papers such as the News Herald and the Hunger Strikers' News Bulletin and News Flashes were printed and distributed to inform of "pro-democracy activities and to include student grievances." Han Minzhu, p.77. Posters and leaflets appeared around universities throughout China, but they were mainly concentrated in Beijing. Big-character posters became a way for individuals to express their views and to collectively share ideas and opinions regarding the government and movement.
After a few minutes, the music begins to be interrupted by several news flashes about strange gas explosions on Mars. An interview is arranged with reporter Carl Phillips and Princeton-based Professor of Astronomy Richard Pierson, who dismisses speculation about life on Mars. The musical program returns temporarily but is interrupted again by news of a strange meteorite landing in Grover's Mill, New Jersey. Phillips and Pierson are dispatched to the site, where a large crowd has gathered.
Television news is very visually-based, showing video footage of many of the events that are reported; still photography is also used in reporting news stories, although not as much in recent years as in the early days of broadcast television. Television channels may provide news bulletins as part of a regularly scheduled news program. Less often, television shows may be interrupted or replaced by breaking news reports ("news flashes") to provide news updates on events of great importance.
New types of popular newspapers, especially Le Petit Journal reached an audience more interested in diverse entertainment and gossip rather than hard news. It captured a quarter of the Parisian market, and forced the rest to lower their prices. The main dailies employed their own journalists who competed for news flashes. All newspapers relied upon the Agence Havas (now Agence France- Presse), a telegraphic news service with a network of reporters and contracts with Reuters to provide world service.
News was destined to become one of radio's strongest services in the early 1930s, but it still had its struggles. At first, radio announcers would just read newspaper headlines over the air, but gradually networks began purchasing news from wire services. In 1932 the Associated Press sold presidential election bulletins to the networks, and programs were interrupted with news flashes. Newspapers objected to this on the grounds that news on radio would diminish the sale of papers.
In this way the Mental Map undergoes two size upgrades, beginning with a 3x3 square. Specific side-quests and mini-game activities are triggered through 'News Flashes' upon level-ups as well. In order to raise page values, the player can, for example, manipulate Codes, examine 'Exploration Points' on a map, present another cast member with things he or she enjoys collecting, defeat a high number of a certain enemy, call on a Spirit for aid, or equip a weapon.
After hearing "Air Raid" on the Columbia Workshop earlier that same evening, Welles viewed the script as dull. He stressed the importance of inserting news flashes and eyewitness accounts into the script to create a sense of urgency and excitement. Houseman, Koch, and Stewart reworked the script that night, increasing the number of news bulletins and using the names of real places and people whenever possible. Friday afternoon, the script was sent to Davidson Taylor, executive producer for CBS, and the network legal department.
Originally, Wischusen worked for WFAN as a reporter and update host for the stations sports news flashes that air every twenty minutes. During his time at WFAN he began working on the station's Jets coverage, hosting the pregame, halftime, and postgame shows. When WFAN lost the rights to the Jets after the 1998 season, Wischusen followed the coverage to WABC. In 2002, he became the play-by-play voice for the Jets on the station after Howard David departed the team for a job in Miami.
The Muzak Corporation built and signed on W47NY, operating at 44.7 MHz, in December 1941. The station aired an entirely musical format with news flashes from United Press. Muzak also obtained a permit to operate experimentally on 117.65 MHz to provide a fee-based service of background music, similar to its wire-delivered offering. As with all of the first FM call signs, the designation represented the location (New York) and its position on the dial in the FM band of the time, at 4 _4_.
Other than people, alligators can be killed, but do not give any benefit. According to the preview of the 3D version by Gameloft, the map is 1.5 times larger than West Coast Hustle. Although it is the successor to Kings of L.A. and West Coast Hustle, the only connections between the games are L.C.'s appearance, news flashes from Kings of L.A., and a reference to Eddie Fallon (in the 3D version's case). In 2012, a spin-off titled Urban Crime was released; it follows the aftermath of the departure of Johnny Gainesville from Miami.
On November 20, 1920, the News began airing nightly wireless news flashes, called the Deseret News-International News Service bulletins. The paper had also formed The Deseret News Wireless Club, with members across the Western United States who would transcribe the radio bulletins and post them in their communities. In April 1922 the paper received a license to officially operate a radio station, with call letters KZN (later changed to KSL). The station's first regular broadcast aired on May 6, 1922 in the form of a talk by then-LDS Church president Heber J. Grant.
Eichler Network is an American company that produces the quarterly CA-Modern magazine, a website, and weekly email news flashes about mid-century modern (MCM) architecture and design in California. It also publishes a directory of contractors and other service providers who focus on modern home preservation and improvement. CA-Modern was founded as a newsletter in 1993 by Marty Arbunich and a former business partner. Central to the Eichler Network's mission is the preservation of Eichler homes and other mid-century modern homes, which are notable and highly valued as representative of modern design principles promoted by the architect Frank Lloyd Wright.
The drama unrolled to the sound of horns and sirens, radio news flashes and during the finale not only were there wrestling matches and athletic events, but the cycle track of the Vélodrome d'hiver was used for a cycle race. There was a chorus — achieved by amplifying the voice of radio announcer, but original plans to project a film onto a big screen were dropped, in favour of an enormous backdrop designed by Fernand Léger. A copy of this backdrop, entitled La Naissance d'une cité, was dedicated by Léger to Jean-Richard Bloch. It fetched €93,600 when auctioned at Christie's in 2005.
There are 3 national radio stations and 63 local radio stations in Albania. Public radio signal of RTSH Radio Tirana covers 80.5% of the territory, while those of Top Albania Radio and Club FM, both commercial radio stations with a national license, cover 93.7%, and the western lowland respectively. There are some ongoing initiatives to measure audience shares in the country, but they are limited in geographical scope and the results are not public. However, radio stations seem to be more of an entertainment medium, with mainly music, interrupted by news flashes or talk show programs.
The company had to lay off one third of its workforce in Namibia and closed down its local news format that has been running for the past 14 years. 15 December 2016 was the station's last day for the broadcast of local news in the traditional format. In line with a strategy to connect with a new generation of viewers, One Africa produced popular daily News Flashes on its social media platforms from this date. In October 2017, the channel launched TODAYOnONE, a daily feature broadcast from Mondays to Fridays at 19:00, bringing its viewers local news and current affairs stories and curated Namibian social media commentary.
In early 1999, TV5 split its European signal into two, with the launch of TV5 France Belgique Suisse, a signal specific to Francophone Europe (France, Belgium, Switzerland, Monaco, Luxembourg etc.). TV5 Europe continued to serve the wider continental audience. A consortium formed by public channels Arte and La Cinquième entered into the capital of the channel, which brought with it new sources of programming. A new schedule was constructed, centred on news programmes such as news flashes on the hour, two TV5 bulletins and rebroadcasts of its partners' main news programmes (20 Heures from France 2, Soir 3 from France 3, Le Journal from TSR/RTS and 13 Heures from RTBF).
A ruling in 2000 by the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, which later heard the case, sided with Vlug and found that an absence of captioning constituted discrimination on the basis of disability. The Tribunal ordered CBC Television and Newsworld to caption the entirety of their broadcast days, "including television shows, commercials, promos and unscheduled news flashes, from sign-on until sign-off." The ruling recognized that "there will inevitably be glitches with respect to the delivery of captioning" but that "the rule should be full captioning." In a negotiated settlement to avoid appealing the ruling to the Federal Court of Canada, CBC agreed to commence 100% captioning on CBC Television and Newsworld beginning November 1, 2002.
The one-hour program began with the theme music for the Mercury Theatre on the Air and an announcement that the evening's show was an adaptation of The War of the Worlds. Orson Welles then read a prologue which was closely based on the opening of H. G. Wells' novel modified slightly to move the story's setting to 1939. For about the next twenty minutes, the broadcast was presented as a typical evening of radio programming being interrupted by a series of news bulletins. The first few news flashes occur during a presentation of "live" music and describe a series of odd explosions observed on Mars, followed by a seemingly unrelated report of an unusual object falling on a farm in Grover's Mill, New Jersey.
CA-Modern is an American magazine devoted to mid-century modern architecture and design in California. It is published by Eichler Network, a company based in San Francisco that also operates a website and sends weekly e-mail news flashes to subscribers. It also publishes a service directory of firms that specialize in repair and improvement of mid-century modern homes, including those built from the 1950s to 1970s by Bay Area developer Joseph Eichler of Eichler Homes, Inc. Founded in 1993 by editor and publisher Marty Arbunich, first as a four-page letter-size black-and-white mailer and then as a 16-page tabloid newsletter also called Eichler Network, it became a 36-page oversized color magazine in January 2006.
Over the years he has presented Mabat , Boker Tov Israel, special reports and news flashes, and served at different times as the head of the foreign news desk, the head of the training desk and the sub-editor of Mabat. For ten years, between 1973 and 1983 he was identified with the consumer program Kolbotek, which was one of its founders and first mentor, with whom he was twice awarded the violin prize. In 1979, Pe'er hosted the twenty fourth Eurovision Song Contest held in the Israeli capital Jerusalem alongside Yardena Arazi. Pe'er continued to be associated with Eurovision, hosting Kdam Eurovision (the Israeli heat to choose the artist to represent Israel), which he hosted from 1981 until 1983 and again in 1986, he also gave the Israeli results out in 1992 and 1995 and provided the Israeli radio commentary on several occasions.

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